[37] Memoirs of Colonel Hutchinson, ed. 1810, i, 181. Cp. i, 292; ii, 44. [↑]

[38] Cp. Overton’s pamphlet, An Arrow against all Tyrants and Tyranny (1646), cited in the History of Passive Obedience since the Reformation, 1689, i, 59; pt. ii of Thomas Edwards’s Gangræna: or a Catalogue and Discovery of many of the Errours, Heresies, Blasphemies, and pernicious Practices of the Sectaries of this time, etc., 2nd ed. 1646, pp. 33–34 (Nos. 151–53). [↑]

[39] Lords Journals, January 16, 1645–1646; Gangræna, as cited, p. 150; cp. Gardiner, Hist. of the Civil War, ed. 1893, iii, 11. [↑]

[40] Green, Short Hist. ch. viii, § 8, pp. 551–52; Gardiner, Hist. of the Civil War, iv, 22. [↑]

[41] Gangræna, p. 18. [↑]

[42] In 1644 he had been imprisoned at Bury St. Edmunds for “dipping” adults, and after six months’ durance had been released on a recantation and promise of amendment. Gangræna, as cited, pp. 104–105. [↑]

[43] Rev. James Cranford, Hæreseo-Machia, a Sermon, 1646, p. 10. [↑]

[44] No. 100 in Gangræna. [↑]

[45] Cranford, as cited, p. 11 sq. [↑]

[46] See G. P. Gooch’s Hist. of Democ. Ideas in England in the 17th Century, 1898, ch. vi. [↑]